Gateway Youth Hockey

Mite C: The Gateway Mite C team defeated YD on Saturday by a score of 20-5. Gateway dominated from the drop of the puck, scoring once again off the opening face-off. Gateway displayed unbelievable passing that resulted in several beautiful goals. In the first period, Gateway only allowed three goals, playing a solid defensive game while scoring ten times. The second period was much of the same. Brayden Cannon and Ben Hebbel led the team with six goals and four assists each, with the other scorers including Jarrod Frates with four goals, Pat Tripp with two goals, Tommy Clavell and Colin Downey with one goal each. Bree Killion was solid on defense and Charlie Carroll had another strong game in net making 40 saves. Gateway has come so far since the start of the season, initially opening the season with five straight losses. Since then, they have only lost two of their last ten games. As the playoffs begin, Gateway is now the team to beat. They will be back in action next Saturday in Falmouth at 1:50 pm against the SC Panthers.

Squirts: Gateway Squirts took to the ice on Saturday versus Franklin, skating strong. In the first period, Joe Urnek got Gateway on the board assisted by Matthew Quinlan. Two more goals were added from Nathan Ribeiro and Quinlan, both assisted by Urnek. In the second, Quinlan scored three more goals, two of those assisted by Urnek. Juni Suarez got a point assisted by Matthew Paling. Ryker King played strong in net, making some great saves with Franklin finding the back of the net just once. In the third period, Urnek scored two more goals getting himself his first-ever career hat trick with assists from Ribeiro and Ty David Ribeiro. Defense was strong helping to secure the 9-1 win. Gateway clenched first in the league and secured a playoff spot with the win.

Pee Wees: The Gateway Youth Hockey Pee Wees played a tough game against Norwood Sunday night. Gateway played three solid periods of hockey and there were great plays and good puck movement from both teams. Gateway’s Stephen Old scored first late in the second period to put Gateway in the lead. The Gladiators were able to hold off Norwood for most of the game with goalie Ryker King making save after save, but Norwood was able to get on the board late in the third period, ending the game in a 1-1 tie.

Middle School 1: The Middle School 1 Jr. Vikings got back on track with a good win over Walpole 4-0. Alex DeMarco played strong in net, making nine saves in his return from a two-month hiatus due to illness. Offensively, the Jr. Vikings got on the board in the first, when Jake DeMoranville tapped a loose puck into an empty net, while the assists went to Robert Ramsay and Wylde LaTulippe. Zack Lovendale took a nice feed from brother, Tyler Lovendale, to beat the goalie five hole for the second goal of the game. The Jr. Vikings were held scoreless in the second, but got on the board in the third when Vyper LaTulippe, off the opening face-off, went down and scored. LaTulippe added an empty net goal to make the final 4-0.

ORR Presents Sweeney Todd – School Edition

The Old Rochester Regional High School Drama Club is very proud to present Sweeney Todd – School Edition. This full-scale musical/thriller, written by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler, stars Emily Faulkner (Jr), Kyle Costa (Jr), Holly Frink (Jr), Michael Amato (Sr), Isaiah Kidney (Sr), Patrick McGraw (Sr),Victor Morrison (Jr), Chris Savino (Fr), and Lexi Melloni (Jr) along with a supporting on-stage cast of 55 students, as well as 54 technicians and seven high school band members playing in the 17-member orchestra.

Sweeney Todd – School Edition: Costumes by Helen Blake, Sound by John Farrell, Musically Conducted by Michael Barnicle, and Directed by Paul Sardinha.

Presented in the Gilbert D. Bristol Auditorium of Old Rochester Regional High School, under the auspices of the David S. Hagen Performing Arts Series, Sweeney Todd – School Edition will be performed Thursday, April 9 through Saturday, April 11 at 7:30 pm and Sunday, April 12 at 2:00 pm. Tickets are $12 for students and seniors and $15 for adults and are available at The Pen & Pendulum in Mattapoisett, The Marion General Store in Marion, and Plumb Corner Market in Rochester. For information and ticket reservations, please call 508-951-5302; tickets may also be purchased at the door. ORR is located on Route 6 in Mattapoisett.

Greater New Bedford Garden Club Scholarship

The Greater New Bedford Garden Club is accepting applications for the $1,000 Rose L. Murphy Scholarship to be awarded to a student enrolled in a full-time college program in 2015-2016. The applicant must be pursuing a degree in horticulture, landscape architecture, conservation, environmental sciences, or related fields. Student must have been a legal Massachusetts resident for at least one year prior to June 1 of their high school graduation.

Applications and required paperwork must be received before May 1, 2015.

For more information, call 508-995-9386.

Wetland Bylaw Draft Being Reviewed

“I’m not trying to be a one-man brigade here … but it gives us the ability to defend ourselves in Superior Court,” began Chairman of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission Bob Rogers on February 9 as he explained his intent for drafting a local wetlands bylaw for public review.

Rogers said a recent decision made by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection – namely, the approval of Daniel DaRosa’s large, private Goodspeed Island pier – conflicted with local community-wide sentiment. That, along with past decisions handed down by the commission, seemed to indicate the necessity of drafting a new wetlands bylaw that Town Meeting might embrace.

A local wetlands bylaw could have bolstered the commission’s vote to deny DaRosa’s application when DaRosa appealed it to the DEP. DaRosa’s appeal was subsequently upheld by the DEP.

The Conservation Commission has appealed the DEP decision on the pier, and the public hearing is scheduled for March 5 at 7:00 pm at Old Hammondtown School.

Rogers will meet with the Mattapoisett Board of Selectman on February 10 to formally request their support as the commission moves forward. (See Board of Selectman coverage in this issue of The Wanderer.)

The wetlands bylaw draft that Rogers is proposing was described as a clear one-page document intended to help the commission in its efforts to protect hundreds of acres of land now in protected status, as well as give them implementable regulations behind the Wetlands Protection Act.

Commission member Peter Newton said that a previous attempt at passing a local wetlands bylaw was fraught with difficulties due to “too many cooks.” That effort, he said, produced a document that no one was happy with, was too convoluted, and lacked goals. It was not supported by the commission nor included on the warrant.

Rogers will have the draft document posted on the Conservation Commission’s webpage on the Town website, www.mattapoisett.net, as early as February 10. He said the draft is formatted after one used in Freetown, one that does not include storm water discharge language. Rogers felt that the State’s Wetlands Protection Act covered that subject comprehensively.

The following is an excerpt of the draft:

“…Except as permitted by the Conservation Commission or as provided by this bylaw, no person shall commence to remove, fill, dredge, build upon, degrade, discharge into, or otherwise alter the following resource areas: 1) Within 100-feet of any of the following: freshwater or coastal wetlands, marches, wet meadows, bogs, swamps, vernal pools, banks, reservoirs, lakes, flats, ponds of any size, rivers, streams, creeks, beaches, dunes, estuaries, the ocean, land under water bodies, lands subject to flooding or inundation by groundwater or surface water, lands subject to tidal action, coastal storm flowage or flooding….”

Public hearings will be posted to vet the proposed bylaw.

Another matter Rogers brought to the commission’s attention was the need for full-time office and in-field support.

In commenting on the fiscal year 2016 budget currently being developed by the Finance Committee, Rogers said that the part-time secretary and part-time agent were overwhelmed.

The sheer volume of work they faced on a daily basis was reaching critical mass, as noted by the lack of meeting minutes for the commission to review, approve, and make available to the public.

Rogers said the secretary did not have time to write up the minutes as she attended to other matters for residents.

Rogers will ask the Finance Committee to review the commission’s budget with an eye towards an increase when he meets with them on February 11 at 6:00 pm in the town administrator’s office.

Rounding out the meeting agenda: Mattapoisett Land Trust received a Negative 3 determination to cut a hiking trail off Whaler’s Way; The Preserve at Bay Club sought and received conditions for two lots on Fieldstone Drive and three amended Orders of Condition for two lots on the same street and one lot located on Split Rock Lane. The commission will also request that the owners of residences located at 2, 3 and 4 Seabreeze Lane meet with them to discuss an Enforcement Order for unpermitted activity.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission is scheduled for February 24 at 6:30 pm in the Town Hall conference room.

By Marilou Newell

MTconcom_021215

Preliminary School Budget Reviewed

On February 5, the Rochester School Committee reviewed the preliminary Fiscal Year 2016 budget that Robin Rounseville and Tina Rood – the budget sub-committee – had prepared. Rood cautioned that the budget being presented was a “work in process” and not yet complete. A final budget will be completed in March for public review.

Superintendent Douglas White noted that the modest 2.9 percent increase was primarily due to operating and maintenance expenses. The total budget figure sits at $1.8 million.

White pointed out a decrease of $33,000 in transportation costs and an increase of $20,000 in technology, which is precipitated by the need to acquire new devices for the PARCC assessment.

A major feature of the new PARCC assessment program is the manner in which students are engaged in the art and science of reading. This was detailed by Dr. Elise Frangos, Assistant Superintendent of Curriculum and Instruction, during her report to the committee.

She said that students will be challenged and involved with reading and developing skills at every opportunity, not only during a reading assignment. Using a ‘transmedia’ approach, students and teachers will have a more enriched reading and writing educational experience.

Frangos also reported on the Bay State Reading Intuitive, another integrated reading program in which she strongly believes. In this program, teachers learn how to become reading coaches. She plans to attend a workshop on the program along with several senior department heads in the district to learn more.

During White’s central office report, he reminded the members that snow days have to be made up at the end of the year as mandated by the state. He also told them about mobile fingerprinting units that will be on-site for teachers and other staff members. This is part of new state regulations for more intensive background reviews.

In his printed newsletter White states: “All school employees, including educators, maintenance staff, cafeteria workers, bus drivers, and employees of contractors who work in the schools and may have direct and unmonitored contact with children are required to complete the new national background check by the end of the 2016 school year.” Volunteers will still be required to submit to state CORI checks at least once every three years, but will not be required to submit fingerprints for national screening.

The mobile unit will visit each town in the district at the following locations and dates: ORRHS/JR – February 13 and March 6 between 8:00 am and 3:00 pm; Sippican School – March 20, 8:00 am and 3:00 pm; Center and Old Hammondtown Schools – March 27, 8:00 am and 3:00 pm; and Rochester Memorial School – April 17, 8:00 am and 3:00 pm. The fee for non-licensed employees is $35 and for license-holders is $55.

Principal Derek Medeiros reported that PARCC testing would take place between March 16 and April 10.

The next meeting of the Rochester School Committee is scheduled for March 5 at 6:30 pm in the Town Hall meeting room.

By Marilou Newell

ROschool_021215

Marion Recreation Girls’ Softball

Registration for Marion Recreation Girls’ Softball will be on Thursday February 26 from 6:00 to 8:00 pm at the Sippican School Bus Loop.

The Learn to Play Program is for girls in Kindergarten to Second Grade. The fee is $25.

The Junior League is for girls in Third to Fifth Grade. The fee is $85.

The Senior League is for girls in Sixth Grade to Eight Grade. The fee is $85.

For more information, please contact Marion Recreation at 774-217-8355 or MarionRecreation.com.

Gallery Talk & Book Signing At Tabor

In a collaborative celebration of Women’s History Month with the Marion Art Center and the Sippican Historical Society, Tabor Academy is pleased to host a gallery talk and book signing on March 1 at 2:00 pm in Tabor’s Hayden Library on Spring Street.

Wendy Todd Bidstrup will give a gallery talk and share stories of an accomplished local woman artist, Cecil Clark Davis, and her own experiences uncovering the life of this award-winning portrait artist. While she talks, guests may tour and view over 12of Davis’ portraits, the largest single collection of her work. All are welcome to this free event.

Wendy Todd Bidstrup has been fascinated with local painter Cecil Clark Davis since she first came to Marion over 40 years ago to Tabor Academy with her husband, Larry, a history teacher. In Lillard Hall, the school displayed many of Davis’ portraits of well-known people like Charles Lindberg, actor Lionel Barrymore and explorer Raold Amundsen, but no one seemed to know much of the story of the artist, or why Tabor Academy seemed to have such an extensive collection of her work. When she learned Davis was a local woman who had lived on Water Street, Bidstrup became determined to find out more and set to work on what has since become a passion to memorialize Cecil Clark Davis and celebrate her work.

Running down leads and contacts over the years, Bidstrup acquired Cecil Clark Davis’ dairies, letters, photographs, a guest book, address book and other personal effects. This treasure trove opened intriguing questions that continued to pique Bidstrup’s interest: “Who was Walter Damrosch, and why was Ethel Barrymore maid of honor at both weddings of Richard Harding Davis?” The puzzle took years to put together, but it is now complete with the publishing of her book, which Bidstrup says provides a “reflection of a time and place in American history through the eyes of Cecil and her peers in letters, diaries, and commentaries of the day.”

Pleasant Rowland, creator of the American Girl Collection and a friend of Bidstrup, had this to say, “The book is full of marvelous photographs and of original Gibson Girl illustrations which depict the life that many women of high social standing lived. But Cecil was not just a beautiful socialite. She was a portrait painter of significance, had a most unusual marriage and divorce to Richard Harding Davis, a dashingly handsome man, the model for the men in Charles Dana Gibson’s illustrations. She travelled to Africa and China with him. Her circle of friends included Ethel Barrymore, John Singer Sargent, Booker T. Washington and Teddy Roosevelt. It is a story of the self-actualization of a woman living through times of great change for women, much like the evolution of the women in Downtown Abbey over the same decades.”

We hope the public will join in this unique opportunity to see the portraits and hear the stories of the life and times of Cecil Clark Davis. Interested townspeople may also enjoy a visit to the Marion Art Center to view their permanent collection of 12 different portraits by Davis during their gallery hours: Tuesday – Friday 1:00 to 5:00 pm and Saturdays from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm.

Academic Achievements

Jessica Tripp of Marion received Honors from Upper Cape Tech for the 2nd quarter.

The following Tri-Town residents were among 1,082 students from Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) named to the university’s Dean’s List for academic excellence for the fall 2014 semester:

– Mary-Lee Barboza of Rochester, a senior majoring in biology and biotechnology

– Michael Gifford of Rochester, a senior majoring in mechanical engineering

– Gregory Kornichuk of Rochester, a senior majoring in civil engineering

The criteria for the WPI Dean’s List differs from most other universities as WPI does not compute a grade point average (GPA). Instead, WPI defines the Dean’s List by the amount of work completed at the A level in courses and projects.

Roslyn Flaherty, of Rochester, a member of the class of 2016, has been named to Assumption College’s Dean’s List, one of the school’s highest academic honors. To earn a spot on the Dean’s List, Assumption students must achieve a grade point average of 3.5 for a five-class, 15-credit semester.

Among those recognized for achieving academic distinction for the fall 2014 semester at the University of Massachusetts Lowell are:

– Morgan Collings of Marion, majoring in mechanical engineering

– Mitchel Geldmacher of Rochester, majoring in chemical engineering

– Andrew Ryan of Rochester, majoring in business administration

– Aidan St. James of Rochester, majoring in plastics engineering

To qualify for the dean’s list at UMass Lowell, a student must have completed no fewer than 12 graded credits for the semester and earned at least a 3.25 grade point average with no grade lower than C and without any incompletes.

Private Road Plow Requests Vex Denham

Although the meeting was for departmental fiscal year 2016 budget review, everyone at the Mattapoisett Finance Committee meeting on February 4 felt Highway Superintendent Barry Denham’s pain.

Fresh from many days of plowing and managing the snow removal activities of the Highway Department, Denham shared some of the backlash he has received. Specifically, he said the problem was with private roads that are not part of the Town’s private road maintenance program.

Of the approximately 60 miles of roadway in Mattapoisett, 16 miles fall into the category of private.

Town Administrator Michael Gagne said that in order for the Town to provide snow plowing and grading services to private roads, those roads must meet certain criteria established by both town bylaws and state regulations.

Many private roads in town do meet the requirements, and the residents living on those roads have submitted the necessary documents that allow the Highway Department to perform maintenance work; however, the scope of that work is limited.

“Private roads are driving us absolutely bonkers,” said Denham.

Denham’s office had received numerous calls and some emails from residents whose roads are not included in the program but who still demand that plowing be done. Several of those who have complained about lack of attention have insisted that they need the Town to plow for safety reasons.

Denham said in situations when the Police or Fire Department is dispatched to a residence on a private road that has not been plowed, the Highway Department is also dispatched to clear the road for the emergency vehicles. He said that many private roads are really nothing more than long private driveways with a single home at the end, clearly making it unacceptable to the private road maintenance program.

The program requires that the road have at least three people living on it and that the road remains open to the residents of the community, not just those residents living on the private way. A qualified private road also requires that the majority of the residents living on the road agree to the terms and conditions set by the Town, and the road must meet certain dimensions for accessibility by town vehicles.

Finance Committee member Pat Donoghue said that in several private beach areas – areas where the Town is providing road maintenance services – large signs declaring the area to be private seem to conflict with the rule that the road remain open to the public. Gagne said he would look into where those signs are located and find out what can be done about removing them.

“We simply don’t have the manpower or money,” Denham stated regarding the limitations of providing service to private roads. “They are relentless,” he said of private road residents demanding the service.

Denham said that of the $70,000 snow removal budget the Highway Department started with at the beginning of the season, only about $10,000 remains. Gagne and Denham both commented that snow removal was the one budgetary line item that may exceed its denoted figure.

In other matters, Chief Assessor Kathleen Costello, during her Assessor’s Office report, noted that the new GIS mapping system (geographical information system) has been useful to her office as well as other departments at Town Hall.

Used for mapping all the buildings in town among other things, it will also be used by the animal control officer, Highway and Sewer Departments, and harbormaster, thus making it an integral resource tool for diverse areas of responsibility.

Implementation of the GIS system will also allow residents to view maps on the Town’s website, including FEMA map overlays.

Costello applauded the work done by Highway Department employee Nick Nelson whose computer skills have aided in implementing the GIS program.

Earlier in the evening, Gagne praised the work done by Brenda Herbeck, treasurer/collector, in assisting the Town in tax title property sales garnering $300,000 in land sales. He said there would be another sale before the end of 2015, which he believes will have a value of approximately $150,000. Those funds will be earmarked for extensive roadwork that is being planned.

All departments meeting with FinCom on this night presented level-funded budgets, except where necessary to meet retirement packages or health care coverage.

Those budgets were: tax collector – $190,000; town accountant – $137,000; Highway Department $540,000; assessors – $154,700; Building Department/Inspectional Services and Zoning Board of Appeals – $207,000.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Finance Committee is scheduled for February 11 at 6:30 pm in the town administrator’s office.

By Marilou Newell

MTfin_021215

Gerald J. Normandin, Jr.

Gerald J. Normandin, Jr., 68, of Mattapoisett passed away February 13, 2015 at St. Luke’s Hospital with his family by his side.

He was the husband of Margaret C. (Wedge) Normandin with whom he shared 46 years of marriage.

Born in New Bedford, the son of the late Gerald J. and Blanche (Maurice) Normandin, he was raised in Dartmouth and lived in Mattapoisett for the last 40 years.

Jerry was formerly employed by the Mattapoisett Highway Department for many years until his retirement.

His greatest passion in life was his family. Jerry’s selfless devotion to his children and grandchildren was evident to all who knew him. Jerry also thoroughly enjoyed annual trips to scenic Ogunquit, ME with his wife and friends.

Survivors include his wife; a son, Gerald J. Normandin, III and his wife Jennifer of Fairhaven; a daughter, Kim Dwyer and her husband James M. Dwyer, III of Mattapoisett; 4 grandchildren, James M. Dwyer, IV, Katherine Dwyer, Ella Normandin and Mia Normandin; and several nieces and nephews.

He was the brother of the late Lucille Mendes.

His Visiting Hours will be held on Monday, February 23rd from 3-8 PM with his Memorial Service at 7:30 PM in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals, 50 County Rd. (Rt. 6) Mattapoisett. In lieu of flowers please make donations to the American Heart Association, 20 Speen St., Framingham, MA 01701 or The Katie Brown Educational Fund (www.gofundme.com/ifs2gk.) For directions and guestbook, please www.saundersdwyer.com.